OPTIONS

lists all versions of the given module (or the matching modules, in case you
used a module regexp) in the perls Module::CoreList knows about.

corelist -aUnicode

Unicodewasfirstreleasedwithperlv5.6.2

v5.6.23.0.1

v5.8.03.2.0

v5.8.14.0.0

v5.8.24.0.0

v5.8.34.0.0

v5.8.44.0.1

v5.8.54.0.1

v5.8.64.0.1

v5.8.74.1.0

v5.8.84.1.0

v5.8.95.1.0

v5.9.04.0.0

v5.9.14.0.0

v5.9.24.0.1

v5.9.34.1.0

v5.9.44.1.0

v5.9.55.0.0

v5.10.05.0.0

v5.10.15.1.0

v5.11.05.1.0

v5.11.15.1.0

v5.11.25.1.0

v5.11.35.2.0

v5.11.45.2.0

v5.11.55.2.0

v5.12.05.2.0

v5.12.15.2.0

v5.12.25.2.0

v5.12.35.2.0

v5.12.45.2.0

v5.13.05.2.0

v5.13.15.2.0

v5.13.25.2.0

v5.13.35.2.0

v5.13.45.2.0

v5.13.55.2.0

v5.13.65.2.0

v5.13.76.0.0

v5.13.86.0.0

v5.13.96.0.0

v5.13.106.0.0

v5.13.116.0.0

v5.14.06.0.0

v5.14.16.0.0

v5.15.06.0.0

-d

finds the first perl version where a module has been released by
date, and not by version number (as is the default).

--diff

Given two versions of perl, this prints a human-readable table of all module
changes between the two. The output format may change in the future, and is
meant for humans, not programs. For programs, use the Module::CoreList
API.

-? or -help

help! help! help! to see more help, try --man.

-man

all of the help

-v

lists all of the perl release versions we got the CoreList for.

If you pass a version argument (value of $]
, like 5.00503
or 5.008008
),
you get a list of all the modules and their respective versions.
(If you have the version
module, you can also use new-style version numbers,
like 5.8.8
.)

In module filtering context, it can be used as Perl version filter.

-r

lists all of the perl releases and when they were released

If you pass a perl version you get the release date for that version only.

--utils

lists the first version of perl each named utility program was released with

May be used with -d to modify the first release criteria.

If used with -v <version> then all utilities released with that version of perl
are listed, and any utility programs named on the command line are ignored.

--feature, -f

lists the first version bundle of each named feature given

--upstream, -u

Shows if the given module is primarily maintained in perl core or on CPAN
and bug tracker URL.

As a special case, if you specify the module name Unicode
, you'll get
the version number of the Unicode Character Database bundled with the
requested perl versions.